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Campaign Finance Resources

To make sure your contribution will be eligible for matching funds, check these Do’s and Don’ts. If you have more questions about the Program, our FAQ answers the most commonly asked questions.

CONTRIBUTOR DO'S AND DON'TS

CAMPAIGN FINANCE PROGRAM FAQS

The Program is designed to encourage New Yorkers to participate in their city elections. While candidates and their campaigns are responsible for following the rules, here are some quick tips to ensure that your contributions, and the candidates you support, comply with the law.

Contributor Do’s and Don’ts

DO:

Fill out a contribution card for each contribution you make. If you have questions, ask the candidate or campaign staff for assistance, but you must complete and sign the card yourself.

Sign an intermediary statement if you are you soliciting, collecting, or delivering contributions from friends or colleagues.

Make sure your contribution total does not exceed the contribution limit if you are making multiple contributions to the same candidate.

Provide invoices or receipts showing the value of goods or services you donate. Donated goods and services are treated the same as a monetary contributions. Campaigns must disclose this information and they are counted toward your contribution limit.

Read the House Party guidelines to ensure you comply with disclosure rules before you hold a fundraiser at your house!

Check to see if you are listed in in the city’s Doing Business Database (DBDB) if you have a contract or another business relationship with the city. If so, you are subject to a significantly lower contribution limit.

Make contributions if you are a corporation, partnership, LLP, or unregistered political committees or with funds from these.

Make anonymous contributions. The names of all contributors must be reported.

Make a contribution on behalf of someone else. Your contribution must be in your name only, and it must come from your personal funds.

Accept any form of reimbursement for a contribution.

Give more than the contribution limit to any candidate. Remember that multiple contributions are aggregated, and that donated goods or services count toward your limit. The candidate may face a penalty for accepting an over-the-limit contribution.

What is the Campaign Finance Program?

New York City’s voluntary Campaign Finance Program provides public matching funds at a $6-to-$1 rate to candidates running for city office who qualify and agree to abide by strictly enforced spending limits.

All candidates for these office, regardless of their participation status, must adhere to contribution limits and disclose exactly where contributions come from and how their funds are spent. This information is audited and made available to the public through the CFB’s searchable online database.

How does a candidate get public matching funds?

Program participants may be eligible to have contributions from individual New York City residents matched with taxpayer dollars. The Program matches each dollar a New York City resident gives, up to $175 per contributor, with $6 in public funds, for a maximum of $1,050 in public funds per contributor.

To qualify for public funds, candidates must be in compliance with all Program requirements, be on the ballot, have an opponent on the ballot, and meet a two-part financial threshold that demonstrates a basic level of community support.

What do campaigns spend taxpayer money on?

The law allows a candidate to spend public funds only on purposes that directly help their campaigns. These can include campaign-related literature, compliance, petitions, mailings, election worker wages, postage, professional services (i.e., consultants), printing, and other uses that may benefit their candidacy.

How does the CFB monitor campaign spending and fundraising?

The Campaign Finance Program requires candidates to abide by strict rules, which necessitate diligent and conscientious record keeping. Every campaign is audited by the CFB to ensure that they correctly disclose all financial activity. Campaigns that receive public funds are given extra attention to ensure that the public’s tax dollars were used appropriately. In some cases, failure to keep proper records or respond adequately to requests for information during the audit may cause the CFB to assess penalties or require that public funds be returned.

Does the CFB offer assistance to help campaigns understand the rules of the Program?

The CFB’s Candidate Services Unit (CSU) is available to answer questions campaigns have about the Program and assist candidates in complying with the Board rules. In addition, the CSU provides trainings on compliance and in C-SMART (Candidate Software for Managing and Reporting Transactions).

Do candidates who decide not to participate in the Program have the same requirements?

All campaigns, whether or not they join the Program, are required to disclose their financial activity to the CFB. In addition, all candidates must adhere to strict contribution limits and to the CFB’s ban on contributions from corporations, LLCs, and partnerships. However, nonparticipating candidates are not eligible to receive public funds and are not subject to the CFB’s expenditure limits.

Can a candidate in the Program spend their own money on a campaign?

The Supreme Court has ruled that mandatory spending restrictions on self-funded candidates are unconstitutional. Candidates who join the voluntary public matching funds program, however, may give their own campaign three times the individual contribution limit.

Where can I find information about campaign contributions and spending?

Information on campaign contributions and spending is available via the CFB searchable database. Information is updated every day, and throughout the day when campaigns are required to file their financial statements. Information contained in the database includes:

the name of each contributor and the amount of each contribution

contributors’ occupation and employer

information about intermediaries

how and where campaigns spend money

Note: Although campaigns are required to collect and report each contributor’s address, the CFB does not make this information available to the public.

What is an “intermediary” or “bundler”?

An intermediary, also known as a “bundler”, is an individual who solicits, collects, or delivers campaign donations from multiple contributors. Campaigns are required to disclose their intermediaries and the contributions they raised. Information on intermediaries is available in the CFB’s searchable database.

Is information on penalties made public?

Penalties must be approved by the Board in public session, and information is released on penalty determinations after they are made. Each campaign’s final audit, including any determination of penalties, is made available as they are completed. The CFB publishes online a list of candidates with outstanding debts to the Board, including penalties assessed for violations of the Act and public funds repayment obligations.

Who is prohibited from contributing to a candidate?

Contributions from corporations, limited liability companies (LLCs), or limited liability partnerships (LLPs) are prohibited. Contributions from political committees that are not registered with the CFB are also prohibited.

Candidates may accept contributions from individuals who reside outside of New York City, campaign vendors, political committees registered with the CFB, unions, or non-incorporated businesses, as long as they conform to the individual contribution limits. These are not matched with public funds.

Contributions from individuals that do business with the city are strictly limited. These contributions are not matched with public funds, nor do they count toward the threshold requirements for participants in the Program.